Showing posts with label book club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book club. Show all posts

Preschool Book Club: Mike Mulligan & His Steam Shovel

March's Preschool Book Club was hosted by my sweet friend Kortney - who I'm delighted to introduce as my guest poster today! What a fun day full of music, noise and outdoor play! Kortney has 2 cutie-pie kiddos and a twin sister, Brooke, who guest posted for last month's book club! Read more about Kortney in her bio at the bottom of this post.

 
For this month's book club, we chose Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel by Virginia Lee Burton. My little guy and I read Burton's Katy and the Big Snow several times this winter, and he enjoyed Mike Mulligan the first few times we read it. But what really hooked us was a narration/music combo we found at our local library. The London Philharmonic Orchestra preformed a symphony composed by Stephen Simon to go along with the story. It was fantastic! We've listened so much that he literally has every word of this long book memorized. (Maestro Classics is the name of the company who produced this work, and they've done several other symphonies to go along with classic children's books. I highly recommend them!)

We started book club by listening to the symphony/story narration and looking at the pictures in the book. It was quite long and harder for a one-time listening audience, but I think kids who get to hear it over and over - or who are very familiar with the story - will enjoy the music recording better. 

For our snack we did a little building of our own. The book repeats the line "four corners near and square, four walls straight down" several times. I broke graham crackers in half and we looked at the four straight sides and four corners of the cracker. Then I gave them a plate with a scoop of peanut butter and five square crackers. They were supposed to spread the peanut butter on the bottom cracker, then try to build up four walls on each side. Then end result *could* have looked like the cellar Mike Mulligan and Mary Anne dug. I'm not sure any of ours were up to building code, but it was fun to try and yummy to eat.
While they were finishing snack, I showed them a few pictures of Mary Anne from the book, and pulled out some pre-cut shapes to show them. We looked at rectangles, a square and an oval and talked about the properties of each shape. I showed them an example of a Mary Anne that I built using my shapes, and asked them to build their own steam shovels by looking at my picture and the pictures of Mary Anne in the book. They did great with this activity! We ended with naming each of our steam shovels, which was probably my favorite part — Christy, Lily, Louie and Sueie.


Since the weather is finally warming up here, we took our last activity outside. I showed the kids pictures of a few other types of construction vehicles and trucks and talked about what they do. 

Then I pulled out a bag of assorted instruments - a triangle, cymbals, wooden blocks, dowels, bells, etc. I asked each child to think of a construction vehicle, and try to make the sound it makes using an instrument. My directions were a little too open-ended for this age. I wish I would have assigned a vehicle/sound to think of first for more guidance, "A cement mixer goes around and around mixing the cement. What instrument do you think could make a sound like a cement mixer?" But they got to try a lot of different instruments, make some noise and then go play on the swings! 


Even the little ones couldn't resist playing some music.


{Kortney is a stay-at-home mom who spends fun-filled days with her 4-year old and 18-month old copying all the fabulous ideas she can find on the Internet. She serves as a childcare coordinator for her church and has a huge heart for kiddos. While she has no musical training or talent, she has a son who loves music and fosters that love through musical books like Mike Mulligan & His Steam Shovel.}
Follow The Iowa Farmer's Wife on FacebookTwitterPinterest and Google+

Preschool Book Club: Dr. Seuss

This month, our Preschool Book Club was hosted by our friend Brooke - who I'm thrilled to present as our guest poster today! The kids had a blast this week and it was full of fabulous ideas. Brooke has two super fun (and adorable!) kiddos and a twin sister who's also a part of our book club! Can I just say these 2 gals make me miss my sisters big time - and as cheesy as it sounds, it's really fun knowing identical twins as an adult! Read more about Brooke in her bio at the bottom of this post!

With Dr. Seuss's birthday just around the corner and no shortage on books or activities, this months book club theme was easy and fun!

We started our time reading Dr. Seuss's ABC: An Amazing Alphabet Book! by Dr Seuss (Google Affiliate Ad). While reading I had uppercase and lowercase sets of magnetic letters spread out on the carpet. On each page, the kids took turns finding the corresponding letter in both the uppercase and lowercase versions. It made the reading longer than usual, but they seemed very engaged when finding their letters or watching their friends look. It was great visual discrimination and letter identification practice as well!

I then mixed up a set of ABC flashcards and they worked together to get them put back in order. More letter identification practice as well as sequencing and working together.

After all that hard work, they were ready for a Seuss snack. We layered strawberry and vanilla yogurt in fancy plastic cups to resemble the Cat in the Hat's hat. We also stacked sliced strawberries and bananas on a graham cracker to make a fruit version of his hat. I tricked them into some patterning and fine motor practice while eating!

During snack, I read aloud One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish by Dr Seuss/ Ring (Google Affiliate Ad). Then they each got a fishing pole and went fishing in our pond for colored fish. The fish were cut out of cardstock with numbers written on one side and a paperclip attached to the tail. The fishing poles were made out of a popsicle stick, yarn, and a round magnet. Our pond was a blue plastic disposable tablecloth. Once each kiddo caught 4 fish, they worked together to order them 1-20.


We didn't have time to read A Wocket in My Pocket as I had hoped for the next activity, but we had discussed Dr. Seuss's silly rhymes with the other books. I spread out a set of large word family picture cards on the carpet and had the kids wait for their turn on the couch. I told each kiddo a word, and they had to stand on the picture that rhymed with that word. Example: one kid was told the word "mall" and had to go stand on the "ball". They loved finding the rhyming pictures so we played several rounds of this game!

Our hour was nearly up, so we ended with some sensory fun. I re-capped the Dr. Seuss story of Bartholomew and the Ooblek since the book is more advanced than our age. We talked about the funny feeling of ooblek, and then they explored (some more than others)! They each had their own container of Ooblek, along with a set of plastic silverware and cups.

Ooblek:
2 c cornstarch
1 c water
food coloring

Despite our busy morning, we could have filled an entire day with Dr. Seuss activities. The books lend themselves so well to early literacy skills and fun! So go check out some Dr. Seuss books from the library and come up with activities your own kids will love as well. Afterall....

"Think left and think right and think low and think high. Oh, the thinks you can think up if only you try!" ~Dr. Seuss in Oh The Thinks You Can Think


{Brooke Vaske is a former kindergarten teacher/reading specialist turned stay at home mommy. Lucky for her, she has 2 eager students (ages 4 and almost 2) at home and a 3rd on the way to participate in her crazy lessons! Together they love to spending their days reading, playing, visiting parks, doing puzzles, cooking, and cleaning (ooblek is not usually part of their daily routine!).}

Preschool Book Club: The Snowy Day

Last week we embarked on a fun new adventure with 3 of our friends who are also planning to homeschool their kids. The 4 of us came together and started a Mommy & Me Book Club! I hosted the first one at our house and chose the book "The Snowy Day" by Ezra Jack Keats.

We read the book, had a snack, talked about how snow is formed and then did several activities. I was a little nervous about how it'd go with 5 kids (and 5 more under 2 upstairs!), but it was great!

The Snack:
While I read the book, the kids had a Build Your Own Snowman snack. I used:
  • Rice cake for the head
  • Raisins, peanuts, almonds, craisins for the eyes/mouth
  • Carrot nose
  • Fruit strip for a scarf
Some of the foods were new for some of the kids, but they all made some tasty-looking snowmen!



We also read about where snow is made:


Here are the activities we did to go along with the book:

(Sadly I don't have pictures of these first two activities, we were too busy playing along!)
Walking like Peter: We got in a line and walked around the living room with our toes pointed out and our toes pointed in, then we dragged our feet and pretended to drag a stick.

Snow Angels: There was snow outside, but it was REALLY cold that day so we stuck to making snow angels inside. All of the kids picked a spot, laid down and made snow angels on the carpet.

After the angels, we moved into the kitchen. Each kiddo had their own cookie sheet/tray to define their space (and if I'm being honest contain messes!) at the table and another mama and I rotated the activities in and out.

Snowman "S" dot sheet from PreKinders: The purpose of this was to dot the items that started with S and they all got the hang of it pretty quickly. Honestly, the only one that stumped them for a minute was seahorse. The rest they were in unanimous agreement about! After they did the items, they dotted a bit more for fun!

Snowman grid from PreKinders: Using the die, each child rolled and then put the corresponding number of cotton balls on the snowmen. We've done this before by ourselves and I have to say I think Sweet P had a lot more fun/interest doing it with other kids.

Snowy Day scene: I saw this on a few different blogs and thought it was a neat project. They really enjoyed tearing the paper, but in hindsight I probably would've given them a smaller piece of white paper because they wanted to cover their entire piece of blue paper! :) The stamps and gluing were a big hit, and I thought it was neat to see how different each of their scenes turned out.


Snow Play dough: I had 5 animals and several Playmobil people to use to make tracks in the playdough - they also used little plastic snowflakes to make snowflake prints.

More ideas for The Snowy Day: